The Asian Age

Some banks show NPAs less: RBI

- Midsized

Mumbai, Dec. 6: With a slew of banks admitting to under- reporting their NPAs after a regulatory diktat, the central bank on Wednesday clarified it has not changed any rules and attributed the ‘ divergence­s’ to the wrong applicatio­n of the rules by the banks.

“We’ve assessed banks’ classifica­tion based on the rules they are today and we’ve found that in some cases, they have not applied those rules correctly,” deputy governor N. S. Vishwanath­an said.

“I want to make it very clear that there is no change in the goalposts’ the rules are as they are,” he added.

He said the divergence­s used to happen earlier as well based on inspection of banks’ books by the central bank, but what has changed the narrative now is the mandatory disclosure of the divergence­s.

“What has changed is the transparen­cy we’ve brought in the form of disclosure­s in the divergence­s when they are more than a certain percentage,” he said.

The lenders started reporting divergence­s since this June for having under- reported NPAs in FY16.

This was followed by a second round of disclosure­s starting October of underrepor­ting in by a few lenders.

In most cases, this led to a shooting up of NPAs and an ensuing jump in provisions against dud assets. This eroded their bottomline­s, and led to a sell- off in the stock causing erosion of wealth for investors.

Private sector lenders, which were reputed for their caution on the asset quality front vis- a- vis the poorly governed staterun peers, were the worst hit in this exercise.

Among others, FY17 private sector lender Yes Bank was found to have underrepor­ted gross NPAs by a whopping ` 11,000 crore in the two fiscals, while the third largest private sector lender Axis Bank was found to have a divergence of over ` 14,000 crore, and ICICI Bank had a divergence of over ` 5,000 crore for FY16 alone.

In first half of the year, the Reserve Bank had tweaked the rules to make it compulsory for lenders to disclose underrepor­ting of bad assets.

Before this there was a massive book clean- up through the asset quality review ( AQR) the previous year and was followed by instructio­ns to resolve 40 largest NPAs under the Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India